Are European Equity Style Indices Efficient?

An Empirical Quest in Three Essays
Nomos, 1. Edition 2008, 104 Pages
Book
€19.00
ISBN 978-3-8329-3855-0
Not available
eBook
€19.00
ISBN 978-3-8452-1225-8
Available
Prices include VAT. Depending on the delivery address, VAT may vary at checkout.
Description
Many situations in the history of the stock markets indicate that assets are not always efficiently priced. But why does it matter whether the stock market is efficiently priced? Because “well-functioning financial markets are a key factor to high economic growth”. (Mishkin and Eakins, 2006, pp. 3-4)
In three essays, it is the aim of the author to shed some more light on the topic of market efficiency, which is far from being resolved. Since European equity markets have increased in importance globally, the author, instead of focusing on US markets, looks at a unified European equity market.
By testing for a random walk in equity prices, revisiting Shiller’s claim of excess volatility through the means of a vector error correction model, and modifying the Gordon-Growth-Model, the book concludes that a small degree of inefficiency cannot be ruled out. While usually European equity markets are pricing assets correctly, some periods (e.g. the late 1990s and early 2000s) show clear signs of mispricing; the hypothesis of a world with two states (regime one, a normal efficient state, and regime two, a state in which markets are more momentum driven) presents a possible explanation.
Bibliographical data
Bibliographical data
Edition 1
ISBN 978-3-8329-3855-0
Subtitle An Empirical Quest in Three Essays
Publication Date Nov 21, 2008
Year of Publication 2008
Publisher Nomos
Format Softcover
Language englisch
Pages 104
Medium Book
Product Type Scientific literature
Product safety information

Manufacturer of products offered under GPSR

Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG
Waldseestraße 3 - 5
76530 Baden-Baden, Germany

service@nomos.de
www.nomos.de

© 2025 Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG